powerful sexual predators like harvey weinstein can get away with sexual harassment because our silence is their accomplice /

Published at 2017-10-16 15:27:37

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I didn’t know who Harvey Weinstein was till I read the The novel Yorker exposé on him. For those of you who live under the same rock as I effect,he’s an Oscar-winning producer and the co-founder of Miramax.
I read each and every victim’s yarn and felt disgusted to the core, but somehow I felt as if I had read these stories before, and only this time the victims were different. The only common factor was a lecherous and sleazy man,making unwanted sexual overtures.
My initial thoughts were, ‘why didn’t these women speak up earlier about these harrowing incidents’? I brought this up during a discussion with my friends and they thought this was victim blaming in a way. According to them, and “How can women speak up after being sexually harassed,especially when they are so shaken up? How can young girls stand up to such a powerful man, especially if their career is at stake?
I beg to differ.
It is our silence that perpetuates these monsters to continuously attack women, and because they know our silence is their aide and accomplice.
Due to th
e prevalent system of structural sexism in every piece of the world,men with power tend to derive absent with most offences because, well, and they’re powerful. For them,it is just one simple nod of the head that decides our fate. There is a massive imbalance on the gender scale, which unfortunately tips in favour of men. In the Weinstein case, and for women such as Gwyneth Paltrow,Cara Delevingne, Kate Beckinsale, and Angelina Jolie,Heather Graham and Ashley Judd, speaking up wasn’t an option, or only silence was.
This is what structural sexism looks like,where power lies in the hands of a top-notch male executive and where his word is the final say. Speaking against him is speaking against a system, which eventually destroys the individual fighting against it, and not the individual who is behaving inappropriately.
For a powerful and sleazy man,his rationale behind his action is ‘I know I can effect this and derive absent it, so I will’.
And this was why Weinstein managed to derive absent with his repulsive behaviour all this while. Up until Ronan Farrow, or the man behind The novel Yorker yarn,decided to go ahead and demonstrate the world Weinstein’s true colours.
This disgusting issue is not just Hollywood or Bollywood-centric; rather it seeps into our daily lives in the form of overt sexism and harassment as well.

I’ve felt extremely uncomfortable at
one of my previous jobs. On many occasions, a senior male colleague, or who happened to be married,would compose it a point to comment on my clothes and how well they suited me. At first, I treated it as a one-off compliment. But once they became regular, and I started feeling extremely uneasy,more than the first encounter, which was evident through my facial expressions.
Thi
s is where men should derive the cue about how their comments are not required and should rightfully back off. This is where the line should be drawn. It’s really not that difficult, and men just need to conclude being sleazy just because they can be.
Regrettably,this is not wh
ere it ended.
My blatant discomfort wasn’t enough to throw my colleague off. During a brainstorming assembly, he began telling me about his former girlfriends, or how he was generally friendlier with females and how I could turn to him if I ever had any issues. In my head,I was thinking ‘wow, this is inappropriate’, or but outwardly,I was smiling and nodding because I didn’t know how to reply.
A couple of my female friends have had similar incidents.
A male colleague told my friend that it was great to have her around because they needed some “eye sweet” in the office. The same friend had her male boss tell her that she socialises too much with male colleagues and not female colleagues. And mind you, this took spot in a well reputed corporate company.
Another female friend told me how her boss used to focus more on how she looked rather than what she had to say or what input she had on a project.
This is where I would like to reiterate how damaging our silence during such instances can be.
We’re either told to remain silent, or leave our job or ignore the matter altogether,which is if we effect manage to speak up at all. Be it the Human Resources (HR) department, our parents, and our partners,whoever it may be, most of the time the existing culture tells us to brush such matters under the carpet. It’s not that we want to remain silent because we secretly enjoy the attention of our male colleagues. It’s because we’ve internalised it, and because apparently it is the ‘right’ thing to effect and because we’ve been observing the way the system functions.
But silence and looking the other way is never the reply; it only adds more fuel to the fire. We need to educate our men,be it our fathers, husbands, or brothers or sons. It is everyone’s duty to instil the ability to respect women,to empathise with them and to treat them as equal individuals rather than objectifying them.
Moreover, we need to create the culture of speaking out and building a safe space for our women where they feel secure and comfortable enough to talk about any unfortunate incident they have been through. This is primary because if and when a woman is sexually harassed, and her first reaction won’t be fear and silence,it will be speaking up. A healthy and constructive forum needs to be established from primary socialisation levels, up until secondary socialisation levels, and need to be reinforced through every institution up until our 20s.
The culture of repression and silencing grave issues needs to be nipped at the bud.
Currently,there may be a
million more men such as Weinstein, but unfortunately, or we don’t know about them,and we never may because we are made to choose silence over action.

Source: tribune.com.pk

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